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<p>Below are some excerpts from RSRH's commentary on Shemos <br>
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<p>20:12 Honor your father and your mother, so that your days may be long on the land that God, your God, is giving you.</p>
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<p>I think he makes some points that some may not be aware of.</p>
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<p>God based Jewish beliefs and convictions, and our acknowledgment<br>
of Him as Master of our fate and Director of our actions, not on the<br>
results of our research into nature, but on the historical experiences of<br>
our people, by which God revealed Himself to us and revealed to us<br>
His Will. Heaven and earth had spoken in vain to mankind; what is<br>
worse, their pronouncements were twisted into polytheistic conceptions.<br>
Only the revelations of God in the history of the Jewish people restored<br>
to man’s mind the monotheistic idea, enabling him to understand the<br>
workings of nature and history on a monotheistic basis.</p>
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<em>Yetzias mitzryim </em> and <em>matan Torah </em>are the two basic facts in the history of the<br>
Jewish people that form the foundation of our allegiance to God as the<br>
Master of our fate and the Guide of our lives. These two facts are historical<br>
truths. However, the sole guarantee of their authenticity is tradition,<br>
and tradition depends solely on its faithful transmission from parents to<br>
children, and on its willing acceptance by children from the hands of their<br>
parents.</p>
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Thus, the survival of the great Divine institution that is Judaism<br>
rests entirely on the theoretical and practical obedience of children to<br>
parents. Accordingly, <em>kibud av v'aim </em> is the basic condition for the eternity of<br>
the Jewish nation.</p>
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Through the father and the mother, God gives the child more than<br>
just his physical existence. Parents are also the link that connects the</p>
<p>child to the Jewish past and enables him or her to be a Jewish man<br>
or woman. From the parents the child receives the tradition of the<br>
Jewish mission, which is shaped by knowledge, a code of conduct, and<br>
upbringing. The parents transmit to the child Jewish history and Jewish<br>
Law, so that eventually he, in turn, will pass them on to his own<br>
children. Just as he looks up to his parents, so will his own children<br>
someday look up to him. Without this connection between parents<br>
and children, the chain of generations is broken, the hopes of the<br>
Jewish past are lost for the future, and the Jewish nation ceases to<br>
exist.</p>
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<p>YL<br>
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